Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 261South Africa
Platinum Property Enterprise (Pty) Ltd v Mcshane and Another (11611/22) [2022] ZAWCHC 261 (19 December 2022)
Headnotes
instructions from the purchaser to proceed with legal proceedings against the first respondent and claim specific performance of the sale agreement
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
>>
2022
>>
[2022] ZAWCHC 261
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Platinum Property Enterprise (Pty) Ltd v Mcshane and Another (11611/22) [2022] ZAWCHC 261 (19 December 2022)
Platinum Property Enterprise (Pty) Ltd v Mcshane and Another (11611/22) [2022] ZAWCHC 261 (19 December 2022)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAWCHC/Data/2022_261.html
sino date 19 December 2022
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN
CASE
NO: 11611/22
In
the matter
between:
PLATINUM
PROPERTY ENTERPRISE (PTY) LTD
Applicant
And
CATHERINE ALMA MCSHANE
First Respondent
THE REGISTRAR OF DEEDS, CAPE TOWN
Second
Respondent
Heard: 18 November 2022
Delivered: 19 December 2022
This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties' representatives via
email and released to SAFLII. The
date and time for hand-down is
deemed to be 19 December 2022 at 10h00.
JUDGMENT
LEKHULENI
J
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This is an application for an interdict and for specific performance.
The applicant
brought this application on an urgent basis and sought
an interim order restraining the first respondent from transferring
an immovable
property, namely, Erf 5[..], 9 G[..] v[…] P[…]
Street, Yzerfontein, to any purchaser other than the applicant. The
applicant also sought an order directing the Registrar of Deeds not
to register the transfer of the immovable property into the
name of
any person save that of the applicant. In addition, the applicant
sought an order directing the first respondent to sign
the
applicant’s transfer documents, failing which the Sheriff of
this court be authorised to sign on behalf of the first
respondent.
[2]
On 14 July 2022, an interim order in favour of the applicant was
granted restraining
the respondent from transferring the property
into the name of any person other than the applicant. The interim
order was returnable
on 16 of November 2022. The first respondent
opposed the confirmation of the interim order and further filed a
counter-application.
The first respondent launched the
counter-application on the basis that the applicant repudiated the
sale agreement. The first
respondent also averred that she accepted
the applicant’s repudiation and elected to cancel the sale
agreement. The applicant
opposed the counter-application on the
grounds that it did not repudiate the sale agreement and that the
sale agreement is, therefore,
not cancelled.
BACKGROUND
FACTS
[3]
The facts giving rise to this case can be summarised briefly as
follows: On 11 April
2022, the applicant duly represented by its
directors and the first respondent, who is 93 years old, concluded a
written sale agreement.
The applicant bought vacant land from the
first respondent for R860 000. The first respondent, the seller,
appointed May and
Associates Inc as the conveyancer to effect the
property transfer. Upon being requested to do so, the applicant and
the first respondent
undertook to sign all documents required to be
signed in connection with the transfer. The applicant performed in
terms of the
sale agreement, and on 26 May 2022, paid the full
purchase price of R860 000, together with costs into the
conveyancer's trust
account as specified in the sale agreement.
Subsequently, on 26 May 2022, the conveyancer informed the estate
agent who brokered
the transaction that the applicant had paid the
purchase price in full in compliance with the sale agreement. The
conveyancer requested
the estate agent to provide proof of payment of
the full purchase price to the first respondent and to arrange with
the latter
to attend at the conveyancer’s offices to sign the
transfer documents.
[4]
Indeed, the estate agent liaised with two daughters of the first
respondent, who assisted
her in sending and receiving emails and
corresponding with the estate agent. The estate agent informed the
first respondent’s
daughters via email that the applicant paid
the purchase in full and inquired about the first respondent’s
ability to sign
the transfer documents on 01 June 2022. The
daughters informed the agent that their mother - the first respondent
- was ready
to sign the transfer papers and would attend the
conveyancer's offices on 01 June 2022. On 01 June 2022, the first
respondent attended
the conveyancer’s offices and refused to
sign the transfer documents.
[6]
Pursuant to that, the first respondent sent an email on 02 June 2022,
to the agent
wherein she stated that she was cancelling the offer to
purchase her property with immediate effect. On the same day, the
agent
informed the first respondent that the applicant did not accept
the purported cancellation and cautioned the first respondent not
to
sign any other offer to purchase. On 02 June 2022, the conveyancer
addressed a letter to the first respondent via email informing
her
that the purported cancellation was unlawful and putting the first
respondent to terms to sign the transfer documents. In the
said
correspondence, the conveyancer drew the first respondent’s
attention to clause 9.1 of the sale agreement that she was
required
to remedy her breach within 7 (seven) days after dispatch of the
written notice by signing the transfer documents at their
offices.
The Sheriff served the said correspondence upon the first respondent,
and the latter did not respond to this correspondence.
On 10 June
2022, the conveyancer addressed a final notice to the first
respondent in which he informed her that he held instructions
from
the purchaser to proceed with legal proceedings against the first
respondent and claim specific performance of the sale agreement
together with legal costs.
[7]
On 27 June 2022, the conveyancer ingeniously arranged with the
Sheriff and the landlord
of the first respondent to serve the
transfer documents upon the first respondent at the latter’s
residential address for
signature. The Sheriff attended at the
respondent’s premises with the first respondent’s
landlord; however, the first
respondent refused to sign the transfer
documents.
[8]
Later, the applicant discovered on 06 July 2022, that the first
respondent had sold
the immovable property to another purchaser. It
was as a result of the purported second sale agreement that the
applicant brought
this matter on an urgent basis to interdict the
transfer of the property to any third party. In this application, the
applicant
seeks an order confirming the interim order.
THE
COUNTER APPLICATION
[9]
The first respondent filed an affidavit to show cause why the rule
nisi should not
be made final and why it should be discharged. In
addition, the said affidavit was also a founding affidavit in the
counter-application
in which the first respondent sought an order
confirming the cancellation of the sale agreement between the
applicant and the first
respondent due to an alleged repudiation of
the sale agreement and her acceptance of such repudiation.
[11]
After the interim order was granted on 14 July 2022, it came to the
applicant’s attention
that attorneys Roopa and Potgieter were
appointed as the transferring attorneys of the second sale of the
same property. On 15
July 2022, May and Associates Inc sent a copy of
the court order to attorneys Roopa and Potgieter, informing them that
they should
immediately stop any transfer (of the second sale) at the
Deeds office to avoid the second purchaser from incurring a financial
loss. In addition, May and Associates Inc sent the applicant a copy
of the interim order and asked her to attend their offices
to sign
the transfer documents. Meanwhile, Roopa and Potgieter attorneys made
an undertaking that they would not proceed with the
transfer process
in respect of the second sale pending the outcome of the application.
[12]
On 20 July 2022, Roopa and Potgieter addressed a correspondence to
May and Associates Inc informing
them that the first respondent would
do all things necessary to effect the transfer but that the first
respondent did not believe
that May and Associates were acting in her
best interest as her appointed conveyancers. It was stated that the
first respondent
wished someone else to attend to the transfer. In
response, May and Associate Inc demanded that before the purchaser
would take
transfer, the first respondent would have to sign a
settlement agreement in which she agreed to pay the costs of the main
application
on a punitive scale. This demand was described as ‘not
negotiable’.
[13]
In a further follow-up correspondence of 04 August 2022, May and
Associates Inc stated that the
purchaser insisted that all legal
costs incurred thus far in obtaining the interim order be deducted
from the purchase price and
that the seller sign a settlement
agreement to this effect. This was also labelled as non-negotiable.
In response to this correspondence,
Roopa and Potgieter wrote to May
and Associates asking for a copy of the proposed settlement
agreement. The said correspondence
also recorded that their client
required clarification as to whether it was the purchaser’s
position that it would not take
transfer unless the non-negotiable
settlement agreement was signed.
[14]
On 11 August 2022, May and Associate forwarded all necessary transfer
documents to the first
respondent’s attorneys, and the proposed
settlement agreement for the first respondent’s signature. On
16 August 2022,
the first respondent signed the transfer documents
after her attorney explained the contents thereof to her. However,
she did not
sign the ‘non-negotiable’ settlement
agreement. The same day, the first respondent's attorney delivered
the transfer
documents, the title deed of the property, and the rates
clearance certificate to May and Associates to proceed with the
transfer.
[15]
On 19 August 2022, May and Associate Inc wrote to the first
respondent’s attorneys in which
they stated that it was the
purchaser’s instructions that since the seller (the first
respondent) had failed to sign the
settlement agreement, that the
transfer process would be placed on hold until the High Court has
made a final order regarding the
rule nisi and interim interdict.
They also stressed that the transfer process is now put on hold at
the instructions of the buyer.
In response, the first respondent’s
attorney advised May and Associates that the applicant’s
refusal to take transfer,
notwithstanding that the transfer documents
were signed, amounted to a repudiation of the sale agreement.
[16]
In terms of clause 9 of the sale agreement, the applicant was given
seven days to remedy the
breach. The said correspondence warned the
applicant that there was no lawful basis to refuse to effect transfer
until the settlement
agreement proposed by the applicant was signed.
At that stage, the first applicant indicated that he had yet to
accept the repudiation.
However, she informed the applicant that if
the applicant persisted in that attitude, she would accept the
repudiation and cancel
the sale agreement.
[17]
In response, May and Associates Inc indicated that the purchaser’s
instructions remained
unchanged. On 22 September 2022, the first
respondent’s attorney addressed correspondence to the
applicant’s attorneys
advising them that the applicant has
failed to perform or to take transfer despite being afforded an
opportunity to do so in accordance
with the provisions of the breach
clause of the sale agreement. Furthermore, the first respondent’s
attorneys informed the
applicant’s attorney that the
purchaser’s refusal to effect transfer until a demand unrelated
to the terms of the sale
agreement was met constituted an ongoing
repudiation of the agreement, entitling the first respondent to
accept the repudiation
and to cancel the contract. The first
respondent’s attorney indicated that the first respondent
accepted the repudiation
and, accordingly, cancelled the contract.
ISSUES
[18]
The questions that this court is enjoined to consider are the
following:
1.
Whether the applicant repudiated the agreement
when it insisted that the transfer process be kept on hold pending
the finalisation
of this application. Put differently, whether the
first respondent validly cancelled the sale agreement based on the
alleged repudiation
thereof by the applicant.
2.
Whether a proper case has been made to confirm
the interim order.
3.
Whether a punitive costs order would be
appropriate under the circumstances.
PRINCIPAL
SUBMISSIONS BY THE PARTIES
[19]
At the hearing of the matter, Ms Venter, who appeared on behalf of
the applicant, submitted that
the applicant’s insistence that
the transfer process be kept on hold pending the finalisation of the
application does not
constitute a breach of any terms of the sale
agreement, and accordingly constitute neither negative nor positive
malperformance.
Counsel contended that time was not of the essence in
this matter and that there was no date specified for taking transfer
of the
immovable property. Ms Venter further submitted that neither
the words informing the first respondent that the transfer process
would be held in abeyance nor the applicant’s conduct could
reasonably have led the first respondent to conclude that proper
performance of the sale agreement (by taking transfer of the
immovable property) would not be forthcoming. In the main, Ms Venter
implored the court to dismiss the counter application and to confirm
the interim order. Counsel urged the court to order the first
respondent to pay costs on an attorney and client scale in respect of
the interdict application and on a party and party scale
in respect
of the counter application.
[20]
Meanwhile, Ms Carey-Wessels, who appeared for the first respondent,
contended that May and Associates
Inc was hostile towards the first
respondent, notwithstanding that she is advanced in age. Ms
Carey-Wessels argued that the first
respondent felt intimidated by
the manner May and Associates dealt with her. She contended that the
first respondent had to appoint
attorneys due to the hostility she
received from May and Associates. Ms Carey-Wessels submitted that the
applicant’s conduct,
ostensibly through the transferring
attorneys’ amounted to ‘bullying’ because of the
way the transferring attorneys
sought to illicit specific performance
from the first respondent in terms of the sale agreement especially
when one considered
the events of 05 July 2022, in which the Sheriff
was sent with the first respondent’s landlord to serve the
transfer documents
upon the respondent.
[21]
Counsel contended that the applicant sought to introduce a condition
attached to specific performance
which was not contained in the
agreement. In terms of the sale agreement, the first respondent was
required to perform by giving
transfer which she did. Therefore, the
applicant’s conduct by introducing a condition that was not
agreed to in writing,
so the argument proceeded, is not binding
between the parties or has any effect, and this constituted
repudiation of the sale agreement.
RELEVANT
LEGAL PRINCIPLES AND DISCUSSION
[22]
For completeness, I will consider the issues in dispute sequentially.
The issue in dispute that
I will consider first is whether the first
respondent validly cancelled the sale agreement based on the alleged
repudiation thereof
by the applicant. The law on repudiation is
well established in our law and does not need an extensive
elaboration. A repudiatory
breach of contract is one which justifies
the injured party in resiling from the contract. W
here
one party to a contract, without lawful grounds, indicates to the
other party in words or by conduct a deliberate and unequivocal
intention no longer to be bound by the contract, he is said to
repudiate the contract.
Nash
v Golden Dumps (Pty) Ltd
1985
(3) SA 1
(A) at 22D-F. Where that happens, the other party to the
contract may elect to accept the repudiation and rescind the
contract.
If he does so, the contract comes to an end upon
communication of his acceptance of repudiation and rescission to the
party who
has repudiated. See
Discovery
life Ltd v Hogan and Another
2021 (5) SA 466
(SCA) at para 16 and 17. The test as to whether
conduct amounts to such a repudiation to justify cancellation is
whether, fairly
interpreted, it exhibits a deliberate and unequivocal
intention no longer to be bound. See
BP
Southern Africa (Pty) Ltd v Mahmood Investments (Pty) Ltd
[2010]
AII SA 295 (SCA).
[23]
Reverting to this matter, it is common cause that the parties engaged
in settlement negotiations
in a quest to find common ground or mutual
understanding between them. The talks continued even on the return
date on 16 November
2022. On the return date, the parties could not
reach a settlement, and the matter was postponed for hearing to 18
November 2022.
After the first respondent signed the transfer
documents, she instructed the conveyancer to proceed with the
property transfer
in the applicant's name. There was a dispute on the
costs. The applicant wanted the respondent to pay the costs of the
application
on a punitive scale. A proposed settlement agreement in
writing was sent to the first respondent’s attorney, together
with
the transfer documents for signature. The first respondent
signed the transfer documents and refused to sign the settlement
agreement.
Pursuant thereto, the purchaser instructed the conveyancer
to hold the transfer process in abeyance pending the final
determination
of the application so that the court could determine
costs.
[24]
Clause 9.1 of the sale agreement, which deals with breach of the
agreement by either party, provides
as follows:
“
9.1
Should either one of the parties breach any of the terms of this
agreement (the defaulting party) and fail to remedy such breach
within 7 (seven) days after the dispatch of a written notice by the
other party (the aggrieved party) demanding that the breach
be
rectified, then the aggrieved party may, without prejudice to his/her
other rights:
9.1.1
either claim specific performance;
9.1.2
cancel this agreement immediately, without further notice; and
recover damages from the defaulting party.”
[25]
It is abundantly clear from the reading of this clause that to cancel
the sale agreement, either
one of the parties must be in breach of
any of the terms of the sale agreement. The argument of Ms
Carey-Wessels that the applicant
has not performed as is required by
the sale agreement cannot be correct. It must be stressed that there
was an intervention by
the court when the first respondent
purportedly cancelled the sale agreement. From the applicant’s
letter holding the transfer
in abeyance, it is evident that the
applicant intended to perform as soon as the matter is finalised and
the issue of costs is
determined by the court. It cannot be said that
the applicant unequivocally intended not to be bound or to be fully
bound by the
sale contract. Instead, it was the first respondent who
repudiated the sale agreement when she unequivocally expressed her
intention
to resile from the contract. I find the quote in LAWSA vol
9, 3
rd
Ed, para
408, to be apposite in this matter. The author states:
“
Repudiation
consists in words or positive conduct indicating an unequivocal
intention on the part of either of the parties not to
be bound, or
not to be fully bound, by the contract. Repudiation is a form of
anticipatory breach of contract because it always
predicts another
form of breach of contract: the repudiator indicates by words or
conduct, for example, that he or she is not going
to perform
timeously or at all (
mora debitoris
)
or that he or she will not accept performance timeously or at all
(
mora creditoris
) or
that his or her performance will be defective or incomplete (positive
malperformance).”
[26]
Notably, the Supreme Court of Appeal has consistently said that the
test for repudiation is not
subjective but objective.
The
test is whether a notional reasonable person would conclude that
proper performance (in accordance with a true interpretation
of the
agreement) will not be forthcoming. The inferred intention, as
manifested by objective external conduct, accordingly serves
as the
criterion for determining the nature of the threatened actual breach.
See See
Datacolor
International (Pty) Ltd v Intamarket (Pty) Ltd
[2000] ZASCA 82
;
2001
(2) SA 284
(SCA);
Discovery
life Ltd v Hogan and Another
2021 (5) SA 466
(SCA) at para 17.
[27]
On the objective facts placed before this court, it cannot be said
that the applicant’s
instructions to defer the transfer pending
a determination on the issue of costs by this court amounted to
repudiation of the contract.
The applicant brought the application
for specific performance against the applicant as it was considered
bound by the contract.
Significantly, it was known to all the parties
that the applicant’s application for an interdict and specific
performance
was pending before this court. A return date of 16
November 2022 was also known to both parties. Pending the hearing of
the matter
on the return date, the parties engaged in settlement
negotiations. The parties knew that the court would hear and
adjudicate the
matter on the return date if their negotiations
failed.
[28]
In my view, the applicant’s insistence that the transfer of the
property be held in abeyance
pending the finalisation of this
application does not at all constitute a repudiation of the contract
or a breach as envisaged
in clause 9.1 of the sale agreement. The
applicant did not, by words or conduct, indicates that it will not
perform in terms of
the agreement. Instead, what can be inferred from
the correspondence addressed to the first respondent’s
attorneys is that
the applicant regarded itself bound by the
agreement and wanted the court to determine the issue relating to the
costs for launching
the interdict application.
[29]
It follows in my view, that the counter-application must fail. This
leads me to the second disputed
issue, namely, whether a good case
has been made for the confirmation of the Rule Nisi. It is common
cause that on 16 August 2022,
the first respondent signed the
transfer documents as contemplated in para 1.3 of the Rule Nisi,
before the return date. The first
respondent essentially complied
with the terms of the interim order. The first and the second
respondent did not challenge or oppose
the applicant’s
application for an interdict on the merits. The only issue that the
first respondent refuted, is the prayer
for costs on a punitive
scale. In my view, a proper case has been made for the confirmation
of the interim order.
[30]
This leads me to the final issue for consideration, namely, the issue
of costs in respect of
both applications. I
t
is a trite principle of our law that a court considering an order of
costs exercises a discretion that must be exercised judicially.
Ferreira v Levin
NO and Others; Vreyenhoek and Others v Powell NO and Others
[1996] ZACC 27
;
1996 (2) SA 621
(CC);
Motaung
v Makubela and Another, NNO; Motaung v Mothiba NO
1975
(1) SA 618
(O) at 631A. The applicant seeks costs against the
respondent on an attorney and client scale. During argument, the
court was informed
that the applicant would be out of pocket if costs
on a party and party scale were granted.
[31]
In considering the issue of costs, it is essential to note that the
sale agreement between the
parties does not specify the scale at
which costs should be levied in case of a breach. Undoubtedly, it is
instructive for this
court to look at the circumstances of this case
holistically in considering the issue of costs. It is common cause
that the first
respondent is 93 years old. She is advanced in age and
depends on her daughters to communicate with the estate agent and the
transferring
attorneys. She appointed the conveyancer to effect the
transfer of the property. Clause 2.3 of the sale agreement makes it
abundantly
clear that the conveyancer, May and Associates, is
appointed by the seller to effect the transfer of the property.
[32]
It is regrettable that May and Associates jettisoned the instructions
of the first respondent
and, instead, took instructions from the
purchaser and ensured that same were carried out against those of the
first respondent
who instructed them. May and Associate, in my view,
straddled its relationship with the purchaser and first respondent so
much
so that the purchaser was eventually considered to be their
client as opposed to the first respondent. Importantly, the
counter-application
was launched after the purchaser instructed May
and Associates to stay the registration pending the outcome of the
application.
This was despite the first respondent’s
instructions to the May and Associates to proceed with the
registration of the property.
In my view, this conduct is unsettling
and highly concerning. I will be directing the Registrar of this
court to forward a copy
of this judgment to the Legal Practice
Council – Western Cape Provincial office for possible
investigation on the conduct
of May and Associate regarding this
matter.
[33]
As adumbrated above, the first respondent is an elderly person, a
nonagenarian. In my view, the
time has come for the courts to bear in
mind the
Ubuntu
principle when considering costs especially in deserving cases such
as this. This principle underscores
the
need for respect for human dignity, whatever the circumstances. See
S
v Makwanyane
[1995] ZACC 3
;
1995 (3) SA 391
(CC) at para 307. At the very least, in my view, this
concept emphasises the virtues of empathy and compassion for a fellow
man,
especially the elderly, like the first respondent.
[34]
The first respondent complied with the interim order timeously, but
she nonetheless caused the
applicant to incur the costs of bringing
the application and obtaining the interim order. Therefore, she must
bear those costs.
However, her refusal to pay those costs during the
settlement negotiations cannot become a new condition in the contract
of sale.
In my view, the applicant and the conveyancer were wrong to
make it a condition and to refuse to proceed with registration of
transfer.
On a conspectus of all the facts
placed before court, I am of the view that a punitive costs order
against the first respondent
is not warranted. Such an order in my
view, would be bereft of
Ubuntu
and prejudicial to the first respondent
.
More
so, the scale of attorney and client sought by the applicant against
the first respondent is extraordinary. It should be reserved
for
cases where it can be found that a litigant conducted itself in a
clear and indubitably vexatious and reprehensible manner
.
See
Plastic Converters Association of South
Africa on behalf of members v National Union of Metal Workers of SA
[2016] 37 2815 (LAC) para 16.
ORDER
[35]
In the result, having read all the evidential material placed before
court, and having heard
from both parties, the following order is
granted:
35.1
The Rule Nisi issued on 14 July 2022 is hereby confirmed.
35.2
The first respondent’s counter-application is hereby dismissed.
35.3
The first respondent is ordered to pay costs on a party and party
scale for both applications.
35.4
The transferring attorneys May and Associates Inc are authorised and
directed to effect transfer of the immovable
property (Erf 5[…],
Yzerfontein) in accordance with the sale agreement dated 11 and 12
April 2022, to the applicant as soon
as practically possible.
35.5
May and Associates Inc are authorised to deduct taxed or agreed costs
on a party and party scale, referred
to in para 35.3 above, from the
purchase price of the immovable property held in their trust account
in respect of the transfer
of the said property into the applicant’s
name before paying the proceeds of the sale to the first respondent.
35.6
The Registrar of this court is directed to forward a copy of this
judgment to the Practice Legal Council - Western Cape Provincial
office for a possible investigation of the conduct of May and
Associates regarding this matter.
________________________________
LEKHULENI
JD
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
Appearances:
For
the Applicant: Adv L Venter
Instructed
by: Geldenhuys Jonker Inc
For
the First Respondent: Adv E Carey-Wessels
Instructed
by: Roopa Potgieter Inc
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Platinum Mile Inv 442 (Pty) Ltd and Another v Chief Director, the Department of Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment and Others (17469/2024) [2025] ZAWCHC 129 (20 March 2025)
[2025] ZAWCHC 129High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)98% similar
Renown Properties (Pty) Ltd v Esus-2-Group (Pty) Ltd t/a The Korner Gilles Blanc and Others (A 295/2024) [2025] ZAWCHC 105 (13 March 2025)
[2025] ZAWCHC 105High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)98% similar
Metrovincial Properties (Pty) Ltd v Valuation Appeal Board for Bitou Municipality's 2017 General Valuation Roll and Others (2672/2020) [2022] ZAWCHC 178 (12 August 2022)
[2022] ZAWCHC 178High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)98% similar
SOHCO Property Investments NPC v Stemmett and Others (12553/2020) [2023] ZAWCHC 127 (16 May 2023)
[2023] ZAWCHC 127High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)98% similar
Property Knight (Pty) Ltd v van Niekerk and Others (A220/2023) [2024] ZAWCHC 30 (7 February 2024)
[2024] ZAWCHC 30High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)98% similar